Festival 2010 NL

Poet

Edward Brathwaite 1930-...

country: Jamaica
language: English
came to Britain in 1949, where he read history at Cambridge University. His first poems were published in Poetry from Cambridge (1951). From 1955 to 1961 he lived in Ghana, where he worked as a government education officer and wrote textbooks for schools. In 1961 he returned to the Caribbean. For thirty years he taught history at the University of the West Indies (Jamaica campus). From 1965 to 1968 he again lived in Britain, where he founded the Caribbean Arts Movement (CAM) in 1966. His doctoral thesis, The Development of Creole Society in Jamaica, was published in 1971. After returning to Jamaica he took an active role in the civil rights movement there.
Brathwaite wrote many long poems, including Rights of Passage (1967), Masks (1968) and Islands (1969), collected in The Arrivants (1973), Mother Poem (1977) and Sun Poem (1982). He wrote for the stage, worked for BBC radio and started the literary magazine Iouanaloa. His poetry, inspired by African oral tradition, has a marked rhythmic quality and expresses a strong personal commitment. As a historian, Brathwaite went in search of the African roots of the Caribbean people, with the aim of formulating a common identity.
A series of setbacks in the late 1980s prompted him to write The Zea Mexican Diary (1993), Shar: The Hurricane Poem (1990) and Trench Town Rock (1994). In 1998 he received the Casa de las Américas Prize for his poem MR, which is to be published later this year. He also received the 1998 Pride of Barbados Award for literature.
Kamau Brathwaite is now professor of comparative literature at New York University. More information about him can be found on the NYU Web site.

Author: Robert Dorsman

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